Showing posts with label Dystopian Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dystopian Fiction. Show all posts

14 June 2011

The Hunger Games

Title: The Hunger Games, Book 1
Author: Suzanne Collins
Genre: Dystopian Fiction/YA Fantasy
Grade Level: 10 +
Pages: 374

This is the second time around reading this one, and it still packs a great big punch. Meaning, I still bawl like a baby from cover to cover. I had to reread this for my YA literature class. The below review is what I had to turn in. If you have questions as to plot, let me know. Most of the reviews you will be seeing in the next couple of months come from this class and as such, do not include a plot summary (since my professor is adamant that that not occur), so if you have questions, do not be afraid to ask!!! I'll answer anything you need to know.


The Hunger Games is an intense emotional roller coaster. It falls under fantasy, sub-category: dystopian fiction. Dystopian fiction is fiction of our own world in the future is a far more dysfunctional state than it currently is. The Hunger Games, for me at least, is so very intense, simply because it does not seem to be all that unreasonable of a future.  Collins has a tremendous talent in pulling one into the story and keeping you there. One even roots for the characters one knows will die, simply because one cannot help it. Katniss is a strong woman, qualifying for that title not by chronology but through her experiences. District 12 is not a place for the soft-hearted to grow up; well, the soft-hearted would never actually “grow up.” Katniss is the focus of the story, although even the “minor” characters are strong characters. Katniss is not perfect though. She is very easy to relate to in her imperfections. She does what it takes to take care of those she loves, and beyond that, she doesn’t think all that much of anything else, simply because she doesn’t have time, not because she is uncaring. What teenager wouldn’t love to feel like they can truly stand out as a hero even with all their flaws? What adult for that matter? 

Dystopian fiction is only truly successful if it seems plausible. Too far off the mark, does not illicit the type of emotional response that is one of its goals. Collins achieves this mostly in the development of her characters. Even when a character is an obvious foil for Katniss, and one knows they will meet a terrible end, one cannot help but feel attached to them, like in the character of Rue from District 11. There are a couple of moments in the plot that require a huge leap on the part of the reader, but since Collins has already drawn in through the development of the characters, a reader can almost pass those by and not notice them. It takes multiple readings to really notice those moments that don’t seem as plausible as the rest of the story. Collins’ use of flashbacks and memory are artful in their placement. She has even found a way to tell the audience what really happened and simultaneously say what the character actually reveals. Seeing the duality in what happened and what a character is willing to reveal is very telling of the character themselves. The plot generally flows very well, although things move quite rapidly. However, instead of being a drawback, the fast flow simulates the desperation of all the characters.


20 March 2011

The Uglies Series

The last book in the series is dedicated "To everyone who wrote to me to reveal the secret definition of the word 'trilogy'."  I love that the author continued a story that was suppose to be a trilogy simply because he was asked.  I mean, let's face it, no series actually ends, the author simply stops telling the story.  Who among us hasn't been seriously tweaked when a series you really loved, ended?

UGLIES
By: Scott Westerfeld
Pages: 425

Tally Youngblood lives in a world were everyone is ugly in their natural state, but that magic number 16 is right around the corner for Tally.  Youngest of all her friends, she feels very alone.  All she wants is to be pretty and party across the river in New Pretty Town with all her friends.  Then Tally meets Shay, who is the exact same age as her and her whole world goes topsy turvy.  Shay doesn't want to be pretty; she wants to be herself.  When Shay runs away, she begs Tally to go with her, but Tally just wants to be beautiful.  However, Tally's city won't let the outside in so easily.  Special Circumstances whisks her away from the operation, and forces her to betray Shay and The Smoke, a town in the wild that doesn't force anyone to have the operation.  Getting to the Smoke is an adventure in and of itself, and something has already begun to change inside Tally.  While in the Smoke, Tally learns the truth about being Pretty.  She falls in love with David.  In an attempt to stay in her new home, she unwittingly betrays them all. In order to redeem herself, she must risk her life, her love, and her mind.


PRETTIES


By: Scott Westerfeld
Pages: 370

Tally is finally pretty, but she is haunted by memories that seem just out of her reach.  She has her friends and Shay all around her, but something is missing.  Then her ugly past comes back.  She finds her note and the cure is offered to her, but getting it will require more brain power than Tally may have left.  Zane is the leader of the Crims, a clique of pretties who like to stretch the limits.  Tally is everything Zane has been waiting for.  With Zane by her side, Tally finds the cure, but fear makes her split the pills in half.  Now Zane and Tally are "cured" but Zane is sick.  His migraines are getting worse, but seeing a doctor is out of the question--afterall Pretties don't get sick.  Can they escape New Pretty Town in time to save Zane? Can Tally save herself when Shay remembers and her hate turns towards her?

SPECIALS

By: Scott Westerfeld
Pages: 372

Tricked by Shay, Tally is now Special-a "Cutter", a special Special, ones that cut themselves in order to stay "icy." But Zane is not Special, not yet, and Tally's mind won't let that be.  In helping Zane escape to the new Smoke, in the hopes that the Cutters can follow and destroy the revolution, Shay and Tally destroy the city's armory.  During the ensuing trip through the wild, Tally and Shay separate and Tally's mind begins to become her own once more.  But the Special brain surge is strong.  Finding the New Smoke, Tally is flung into a nightmare.  Can Tally remain Special and still be herself?  Can she save her world?  Who will she loose this time? Can anything or anyone survive Dr. Cable's insanity?

EXTRAS

By: Scott Westerfeld
Pages: 417

It has been three years since the "mind-rain" descended and everyone around the world was free from forced brain surge.  Aya Fuse is an Extra, someone who doesn't matter in a reputation based society.  All Aya wants is to kick the greatest story and be cloaked in reputation so that she can be someone.  When Aya meets the Sly Girls and descends into their world, she gets more than she bargained for, the story of a lifetime.  A story that brings out Tally Youngblood.  Tricked by Tally, they are captured by the "aliens" that are creating what everyone believes are weapons of mass destruction.  As Aya is forced into an adventure, she learns the true meaning of Extra, and that she can be someone without a cam pointed at her twenty four-seven.


Genre: Dystopian Fiction
Grade Level: 6-12

I began reading this series, because I had no idea what it was about and all of my Junior High kids at the school were begging for it constantly.  I like understanding why something is popular.  And oh freaking my, did I get it.  Talk about a future, I fear we are not far from!!  Not to mention the subject of body image that is heavily interwoven throughout the tale, something we all fight with--not just teenagers.  The story is artfully woven.  I enjoyed the fast past and the conflicts were perfect.  You were always on the edge of your seat, at least I was.  I couldn't put the books down and yet, I didn't want to turn the page.